The Hi Record label in Memphis got its start in 1957 when Ray Harris,
Bill Cantrell and Quinton Claunch pitched a recording of Carl McVoy to
Joe Cuoghi. McVoy was an older cousin of Jerry Lee Lewis and as a piano
player had unlocked the secrets of the boogie-woogie style Jerry
heard in his youth. Cuogi was the owner of Poplar Tunes on Poplar Ave.
in Memphis where Elvis used to frequent and bought many of his early
records. Cantrell and Claunch had formerly worked for Sun and Meteor
records and Ray Harris had previously recorded, unsuccessfully, for Sun.
Harris had been a coworker and friend of Bill Black's while working for
Firestone and was inspired after attending one of the early
Sun sessions with Elvis. With a $3.50 demo by McVoy of You are My
Sunshine, Cuoghi was impressed enough to seek financing and partner
with them to start the label.1

Cuoghi got his lawyer, Nick Pesce, along with Sam Esgro, Bill Brown and
Bill Crudgington to put up $500 each and they had the record recut in
Nashville. Though all originally had equal shares in the label, Cuogi
bought out Esgro, Brown and Crudgington and became the label's president
while Harris, Cantrell and Claunch contributed with technical and
creative aspects. Forced by defaulting distributors by 1958, both the
recording and McVoy's contract were sold to Sam Phillips and with the
proceeds Hi acquired the former Royal Theater at 1320 S. Lauderdale
Street to convert for their studio.1

The 375 seat theater originally opened in 1915 as the Shamrock Theater
and operated as such till around 1922. By 1927 it had been reopened as
the Royal Theater and closed again around 1955.2
After opening it as a studio and installing recording equipment the
first song recorded there is said to be Tragedy, by Thomas Wayne and
produced by Scotty Moore for the Fernwood
label. Bill Black and Scotty
were the only musicians on the record.3
As the home of Hi Records, most of the early recordings by obscure
performers failed to sell and success didn't come until the summer of
1959 as the label was about fold.1

After Elvis left for the Army in 1958, Bill Black had been had been
doing repairs for Ace Appliance in Memphis and later touring in a band
put together by Scotty to back Thomas Wayne that included DJ on drums
and also Reggie Young on guitar. Both Reggie and Bill had been hanging
around Hi (Royal), probably at least since the recording of Tragedy and
for all intents became members of its' house band. According to Scotty,
the band members worked up a riff they called “Smokie.” Reggie
said, I tuned my guitar down a couple of step, where it was real
low, and I played rhythm with a pencil as a pick—that's how that shuffle
kind of came about. Nationally, the label was distributed by London
Records and an executive who heard them suggested they form a band.
Reggie said, We tried to figure who to name it after. It was either
Bill or me, but given Bill's history with Elvis they felt his name
would be more recognizable.3

Bill Black and Joe Cuogi with a Hi single of Smokie
Part 2 by Bill Black's Combo

So in September of 1959 Hi released its first hit, an instrumental by
Bill Black's Combo, which initially consisted of Bill on bass, Reggie on
guitar, Marty Willis on sax, Joe Lewis Hall on piano and Jerry Arnold on
drums. Instrumentals would set the standard for the Memphis label for
the next several years and Billboard voted the combo the #1 instrumental
band for 1960, 61 and 62. The combo's
lineup though would change soon. Reggie got drafted and left for the
Army for two years and Hall and Willis were replaced by, at times, Carl
McVoy or Bobby Emmons on piano and Ace Cannon on Sax. Chips Moman, Hank
Hankins and Tommy Cogbill each at times became the guitarist for the
combo. Quinton Claunch left on bad terms and his share in Hi was bought
out by McVoy. He would later co found Goldwax records.1

Sid Holmes, whose band the Cavaliers had
backed
Thomas Wayne and Scotty in the summer of 1959 and had soon
after relocated to Memphis, remembers playing regularly at one local club
and that Ace Cannon used to sit in sometimes.
A fan of Bill and Scotty since 1954 he said, I probably said
something complimentary to Cannon concerning Bill. I had no idea Cannon
was going to be there playing sax? When I met Bill Black he came across
to me as one the nicest friendliest people I'd ever had the pleasure of
meeting. He was at Hi's studio
during the Combo's recording of Don't Be Cruel at Bill's invite. Ed Logan who joined the Cavaliers in Memphis later went on
to join the combo.

The combo appeared in the 1961 release of the film
Teenage Millionaire, along with Jackie Wilson, Chubby Checker,
Dion DiMucci and Jimmy Clanton.4
Ace Cannon cut a solo album with his own combo in 1961 and soon had a
hit of his own with Tuff.1 On
February 12th of 1961 the combo made an appearance on the Ed Sullivan
Show. That night the show also featured appearances by Paul Anka,
Lucille Ball, Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Jimmy Durante, Henry Fonda, Peggy
Lee and comedians Dan Rowan and Dick Martin among others.5
Robert Johnson in the Press Scimitar reported that "things are
breaking wide open for Bill Black, the Memphis musician who started out
with Elvis, went with him all the way to the big time, then got lost for
a time in the backwash."3 Though
in 1962 Bill quit touring and Bob Tucker took his place on bass. Around
then Reggie was discharged and picked up again.

Bill had become a co-owner in the ABLE Appliance Company at 908 Chelsea
Avenue, an acronym actually for the initials Armstrong, Black, Langston
and another that can't be recalled.6
After he stopped touring he opened his own studio further up Chelsea
just around the corner of Thomas St. where Chips Moman would later open
American Sound Studios, and started his own label. Marty Lacker
remembers it being the third door up from the corner, which would be at
about 627 Chelsea. Bill's daughter Nancy remembers it adjacent to the
drugstore on the corner which someone broke into by breaking into the
studio and breaking a hole in the wall. Bill named the studio Lyn-Lou
Studio after his daughter Nancy Lynne and son Louis, and the label
Louis. Larry Rogers was his engineer.

Dennis Turner's version of Lover Please, released on the
Louis Label and distributed by London

Bill purchased an Ampex 351 tape recorder from Sam Phillips, one that was
said to have been used at Sun.7 One
song they recorded and released on the Louis label was Lover Please
written by Billy Swan and performed by Dennis Turner. It was picked up by Clyde McPhatter who turned it into a top ten
hit. On March 31st it reached #23 on the Billboard chart in the first
week of its release. By then Swan had moved to Memphis to write for the
combo.8

In 1964 when the Beatles first toured the US and Canada, the combo toured with them
and also backed the other opening acts. Several of the venues on the
tour were the same ones Bill, Scotty and DJ had played in 1957 with
Elvis, like Chicago, Detroit,
Toronto and Vancouver.
The US leg was followed by a
European tour. Reggie said he only joined the tour because he wanted to
visit England. Don and Dave Miller, local boys with a band called
the Castells, did lawn work for Bill. They related how they once went
into his garage the night after the combo played at the Palladium in
London and saw a poster hanging advertising the Bill Black Combo, in
large bold letters, with the Beatles. They themselves would later record
at Lyn-Lou with Bill, using Bill's Fender bass.9

An LP by Bill Black's Combo featuring Bill's
Kay Maestro
bass (reversed) that he used with Elvis on the covercourtesy ebay

Another story involving the British invasion and Bill comes from his
daughter Nancy. She recalls that when the
Yardbirds toured the US they
came to Memphis and played the Mid-South Coliseum. Bill got her
and her friend tickets and drove them to the show. She said, He dropped me and my friend off at the front
door of the Mid-South Coliseum where the concert was to be held, then
parked in the parking lot to wait for however long the concert was...I
believe he had a Louis L'Amour western to read while he waited...he was
surprised when we suddenly showed up back at the car wanting to go home.
I was the first person to the their limo when they opened it to get
out...that's when I saw what they looked like and their music just lost
its magic.
Much to Bill's dismay after his efforts, she was expecting
them be "cute" like the Beatles. She was only 14 at the time.6

Bill Black, posing on the set with gear from the comboPhoto courtesy Heritage Auctions

The Yardbirds first toured the US in August of 1965 and by then Bill did
not have long to live. He had been suffering from headaches for years
and after complaining about a pain across his temple and upper cheeks in
April of 1965 his wife took him to the doctor. They found a tumor on
the left side of his brain. Though he had two surgeries the prognosis
did not look good and by the fall his condition worsened. On October 25,
1965, at the age of 39, Bill died.3

Shylo recording at Lyn-Lou with Larry Rogers on right -
May 1982Photo courtesy Billboard

1518 Chelsea Avenue in MemphisPhoto courtesy Google Streetview

After Bill's death, Bob Tucker and Larry Rogers bought Lyn-Lou Studios and the rights to use
the name Bill Black’s Combo. Reggie left to become
the guitarist for the staff band at American Sound Studios that also
included combo alumni Bobby Emmons and Tommy Cogbill. Led by Bob Tucker,
the combo performed into the '80s. Larry kept the name Lyn-Lou and by
1969 at least had relocated the studio to 1518 Chelsea Avenue. It was
there until around 1984 when Larry opened
Studio 19 in
Nashville, the former Music City Recorders that Scotty owned. Bob Tucker
now owns Bob Tucker Motors on Interstate 55. Both Larry and Bob would be
instrumental in the sale of Bill's Kay upright
bass to Linda McCartney for her husband Paul. It had initially been
bought by
Mike
Leech, another member of the house band at American Sound.

Trumpeter and bandleader Willie Mitchell had joined the ranks at Hi
Records in the early '60s and ushered in its Soul era. Joe Cuogi died in
July of 1970 and Mitchell became executive vice-president buying out Ray
Harris and Carl McVoy. Carl McVoy went back to working construction. Harris later started Trace Studio in Tupelo in a
joint venture with Sam Phillips whose son Jerry was married to Harris'
daughter, but according to Colin Escott the deal went sour.1 Under Mitchell the
Hi label had its most successful
years in no small part due its most successful artist, Al Green. Cantrell
stuck with Hi through by the time Hi was sold in 1976, he and Cuoghi’s
lawyer Nick Pesce were the only partners remaining from 1957. The
arrangement with London Records for national distribution continued until 1977.
Atlantic Records offer to buy Hi for $9 Million but the offer was
refused. It ultimately sold for much less in 1976 to Al Bennett, one
of the founders of Liberty Records, who operated from the West Coast.
After a couple of years of trying to record Memphis Soul in Los Angeles,
Willie Mitchell left the label.10Royal Studio is still a
functioning facility and the section of S. Lauderdale street it is
on has since been renamed to Willie Mitchell Boulevard.

After one of Bill's operations Scotty and Bill came back to Memphis and
had dinner with him. By then Scotty had relocated to Nashville and D.J.
was back in Shreveport. Bill kept up a front for them though and they left
thinking he looked well and seemed like his old self. After Elvis
heard about Bill he visited with them. He told Bill's wife Evelyn privately that if
anything happened he would not attend the funeral to keep it from
turning into a circus but would come back when it was over with. After
Bill died they all went out to Graceland to commiserate, and just like he
told her, Elvis visited with Evelyn later. Though Bill cited the combo
for not returning with Elvis when he came back from the Army, Evelyn
thought it wouldn't have mattered because of they way he and Scotty were treated.
She said, He thought a lot of Elvis and he missed playing with him.
He wasn’t mad, it was more like he was disappointed. He would have liked
to have stayed with Elvis until he died.3
Colin Escott wrote, For Elvis, the loss of Black and Moore deprived
him of two links to the past—in fact, the outside world—and contributed,
albeit marginally, to his growing isolation. "Elvis Presley—Scotty and
Bill" had a charming, folksy ring to it. When those two names
disappeared from the record labels, the change ran much deeper than a
renegotiated contract.1

added March 21, 2014

Special Thanks to Nancy Shockley, Marty Lacker, Bob
Tucker and Sid Holmes for their assistance with this page.